So buy the TVS Stage 4 if it does everything you want.
It doesn't. I want to set my own shift points on a whim, etc. The only thing TVS Stage 4 has (according to their advertising) is 750nm+.
Though I guarantee you it does not see more than 630nm from engine or more than 655 Nm clutch torque.
I will reach out to TVS and ask this specifically. If max they can go is 630nm, then their 750nm+ claim is false advertising and should be removed. I will post their reply here.
You can always treat the torque as garbage in/garbage out variable though. Easily done by decalibrating a bunch of stuff in the gearbox.
I also found this message by you in another thread:
Proper ECU tune which reports torque to the gearbox in a linear fashion.
It doesn't even matter what the absolute numbers are, it's just important that it is linear.
I don't understand if absolute numbers don't matter, why can't I underreport torque in a linear fashion from EcuMaster? Is it because other blocks like ABS will pick up the same "wrong" torque and it will cause problems?
Also the problem is not the "gears" but the input shaft. That said, it takes special kind of stupid to mess with the internals of a DQ250 when the DQ500 and DQ381 are freely available.
If you have any "800nm goal" then sell the current transmission and buy a DQ500.
I already got it installed anyways. If it breaks, I'll have to switch to DQ500. Until then, I'm gonna try to tune my DQ250.
But hey, you already know exactly what to do, so why are you even asking on here?
I'm here to collect information.
I may say - do what you planed and share outcome. Points to look:
Hardware:
Clutch basket - it snaps input shaft from flywheel side - it was mentioned in trail already
Input shafts inside gearbox also teds to bend/twist - rare case but seen happen in drag followed by broken in half
Gears itself - it brakes tooths and burns synchro, even main pair seen broken tooths
Differential - better replace with something more solid - as in stock main axis for satellites tend play up eating material in differential bell with drama followed
Software:
Can it deal with 500nm - yes it can without ASW mods messing up with microslip and suffering bit chaos with improper torque/pressures management. Not ideal but possible.
Patching it - variuos options mentioned in trail. If you investigate bit more you may meet few opensource patches for DQ TQ management for personal use only.
Just buy solution - there no ideal ones - there always will be cons/pross.
External controller also can be option. There quite few in market.
Keep going!
Thanks! I'm pretty sure most of DQ250 failures happened during a launch on a turbo car (torque rises very fast and peaks at 3500RPM). My car has a centrifugal supercharger, torque is growing gradually and peaks at high RPMs. I hope this will save my DQ250, haha.